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Eno Sarris

Saves and Steals

Injured Closers Abound

The situation in Baltimore is not so clear-cut. Kevin Gregg is not the best pitcher, but he's okay. He's although been dealing with some nicks and bruises this spring. Koji Uehara has an awesome strike-to-walk ratio, but also is an extreme flyballer in a hitter's park. Uehara looks like the better pitcher overall, but Gregg is the expensive import. This is a tough one to handicap, and usually in these cases the best thing is to go with the better pitcher and hope the manager sees it eventually.

Most of the rest of this list consists of committees filling in for closers that will begin the season on the DL. The oft-injured Frank Francisco and Andrew Bailey left some okay pitchers in their roles as they left, but it's Jon Rauch who's probably the sole closer while number one is away. In Oakland, it looks like a lefty-righty platoon with Brian Fuentes and Grant Balfour. Brandon League is a good pitcher, but David Aardsma's strikeout punch is preferable once he's healthy. Ryan Madson is a better pitcher than Jose Contreras, but ask a Phillie phan and they may tell you that Madson doesn't have the gumption for it. That may be the case in San Francisco, too, where Sergio Romo is great but sometimes unpredictable, and the manager may go with Santiago Casilla.

Last and least on the list is the Tampa Bay situation. The team continues to affirm that it's a committee, which makes it hard to pick up any of the options. Adam Russell looked like a good pickup once he came over in an offseason trade, but hasn't looked that great this spring. Joel Peralta is an extreme flyballer with some iffy splits, but he may figure in from the right side. Kyle Farnsworth is a head-case with surprisingly solid numbers - who knows what he'll do. Jake McGee, however, is the upside pick in the bunch. He is a lefty, meaning he'll probably get at least the lefty-heavy saves, and he's also a fireballer with immense strikeout ability. If he shows he can handle the mental aspect of the role, he'll probably win out in the end.

Brad Lidge and David Aardsma are different stories. Lidge is scheduled for an MRI on his shoulder that will determine the length of his stay in club DL, and Aardsma is in the middle of a long rehab process. He may be back in the second month of the season.

The Deposed:

None… yet.

* * * * * * * * * *

The Steals Department

Mixed leaguers might find Dexter Fowler on their wires, and they shouldn't. Last year, Fowler improved his work against righties - which was important because he used to be known as a lefty-killer. He also improved his overall strikeout rate by three percent and improved his power numbers. He still hasn't gotten the handle on efficient basestealing (he's been successful on 67.8% of his attempts), but he's obviously a fast dude with average power. Most importantly, Fowler is the sole owner of center field in Colorado. Given that full slate of at-bats, Fowler could easily hit double-digit home runs, steal close to thirty bases, and put up a middling batting average. Think Shane Victorino, but at a much lower cost.

In deeper leagues, there's a move that might take some courage waiting for you on your waiver wire. Notorious 'hothead' Nyjer Morgan has been traded to the Milwaukee Brewers, and is being summarily dropped because Carlos Gomez is supposedly the incumbent in charge. The thing is, Gomez is one of the worst hitters in baseball. He walks at a below-average rate, strikes out more than the average player, has little power, and despite wheels, can't get on base to save his life. If he didn't own a plus-plus glove, he wouldn't have a job in baseball. Morgan, on the other hand, doesn't deserve the hothead label for one day late last season, strikes out much less than Gomez, and has similar wheels. He's been an elite defender before, too. If he can show good glove with his new team, he'll steal that starting role.

Welcome to a new year of S&S, "fresh to deaf" as the young people on the teevee used to say before I put my boot in it. Even if the new season is fresh, there are differing levels of freshness.

For example, there's plenty of hope in Boston, where the spring has brought bird-chirping optimism. They probably feel so fresh, so clean and so ready to go. I'm sorry to the fans in Pittsburgh, though - there's more ennui than hope in that city, maybe.

In honor of the coming season, we'll name our first tiers after teams. As you drop in tiers, you drop in hope, and you drop in closer quality. It's a sad reality, but a strong way to rank the closers, in the end. What else are we doing when we draft these guys but hoping that they perform well?

And to everyone in every city - keep hope alive. You never *really* know.

You might be surprised by the names that are missing from this list as currently constructed. Let's instead focus on what's here.

What you have are three young fireballers that are in the prime of their careers, providing strong strikeout numbers, and keeping their ratios minuscule for most of their careers so far. You may quibble with what's missing, but it's clear that these guys belong here. Only Heath Bell really has any risk of losing his job if his team falls out of contention, but the Padres also kept Trevor Hoffman through some lean years… they might stick with the Bell tolling.

The Braves are a good team but have some flaws. These are all good closers, but not without their flaws as well.

Mariano Rivera is still great, and most would have him in the first tier. The fact remains that he is 41 and showed the third-worst strikeout rate of his career last year. Only Trevor Hoffman and Dennis Eckersley have ever saved more than 30 in a season over the age of 41, and no-one since 1970 has done it, period. The gravy train will come to a standstill at some point, and that risk has to be reflected somewhere. He's a value if you don't believe there's much risk, but he's not usually one of the first three closers off the board anymore.

Carlos Marmol has an elite strikeout rate, and a league-worst walk rate among relievers. Matt Thornton is a great pitcher with perhaps the best four-seamer in the business, but there are whispers that he's not a great closer. Joe Nathan was a great pitcher and should be a value pick this year, but he has to show he's healthy before he gets all the save pops.

Jon Papelbon? He's coasting on his laurels, really. Going off the numbers he put up last year, he should be a tier lower. His strikeout rate was still there, but he showed a full-season career-worst walk rate and was disastrous in September. Long memories are good for fantasy managers, and that's why he'll debut here. Of course, short memories are better for closers, so hopefully he's forgotten all about last year.

The Rockies may make the postseason, they may not. These closers may put up great numbers, they may not.

Francisco Rodriguez halted a decline in his peripherals last year, showing that he can still put up the big year. If only his team wasn't facing a $17+ million option that triggers if he finishes 55 games, we'd pencil him in for a strong season. Who knows where he ends the year if the Mets struggle?

John Axford lacks a long resume, and his walk rate is also a reason to worry. J.J. Putz does have the resume, but it's spotty and includes many lost seasons due to injury. Last year, Jose Valverde showed the worst strikeout rate of his career, and the worst walk rate of the last five years. The groundball rate, upped on the back of his new splitter, helps, but you also own your closer for his strikeout rate. Which is also why you have to be a little skeptical of Chris Perez, who didn't manage a K per inning last year, and still walked four per nine. Huston Street had an okay year, but only put in a little more than 47 innings last year - so he belongs in the tier named after his own team.

Count me as a believer that Jonathon Broxton can still find what he's lost, but it sure gets harder to believe in him with every day. He was doing okay until a recent spring shelling, and he's supposedly the closer for now, so draft him, and then handcuff him with the young fireballing Kenley Jansen or the wily lefty Hong-Chi Kuo perhaps.

Joel Hanrahan is pretty good - his tendency to give up flyballs and walks is mitigated by a nice strikeout rate - but Evan Meek lurks. Craig Kimbrel is Carlos Marmol redux, but because he's so young, the team has announced the season will begin with Kimbrel in a tandem with lefty Jonny Venters. By the end of the season, the smart money is on the strikeout guys, Hanrahan and Kimbrel.

The list of more assured closers ends with a group of serious question marks. Drew Storen is listed alone because he was groomed to be the closer and has a nice four-pitch mix that should help him win out, but Tyler Clippard and Sean Burnett may get some early saves. Leo Nunez 'might' be the closer according to his GM (Clay Hensley lurks). Ryan Franklin has the worst strikeout rate among closers and if his team implodes any further, they may trade him and go to the future with Jason Motte. Francisco Cordero has been sliding for three years, doesn't have good peripherals, and has the famous Aroldis Chapman breathing (heavily) down his neck.

A few of these guys will be solid all year, but they have as many question marks as a young team in the American League East would.

Brandon Lyon had the second-worst strikeout rate among closers last year, and despite being a flyballer in a hitters park, managed to give up a career-low in home runs per nine. That combination of facts probably won't continue, and young Wilton Lopez, who only walked five batters all season last year, is there to take the ball from him. Fernando Rodney is in a similar situation - he's a terrible pitcher that's somehow been installed as a closer - and has Jordan Walden (young smoke-thrower) coming up behind him. Once Scott Downs recovers from his broken toe, he'll be involved too.

The situation in Baltimore is not so clear-cut. Kevin Gregg is not the best pitcher, but he's okay. He's although been dealing with some nicks and bruises this spring. Koji Uehara has an awesome strike-to-walk ratio, but also is an extreme flyballer in a hitter's park. Uehara looks like the better pitcher overall, but Gregg is the expensive import. This is a tough one to handicap, and usually in these cases the best thing is to go with the better pitcher and hope the manager sees it eventually.

Most of the rest of this list consists of committees filling in for closers that will begin the season on the DL. The oft-injured Frank Francisco and Andrew Bailey left some okay pitchers in their roles as they left, but it's Jon Rauch who's probably the sole closer while number one is away. In Oakland, it looks like a lefty-righty platoon with Brian Fuentes and Grant Balfour. Brandon League is a good pitcher, but David Aardsma's strikeout punch is preferable once he's healthy. Ryan Madson is a better pitcher than Jose Contreras, but ask a Phillie phan and they may tell you that Madson doesn't have the gumption for it. That may be the case in San Francisco, too, where Sergio Romo is great but sometimes unpredictable, and the manager may go with Santiago Casilla.

Last and least on the list is the Tampa Bay situation. The team continues to affirm that it's a committee, which makes it hard to pick up any of the options. Adam Russell looked like a good pickup once he came over in an offseason trade, but hasn't looked that great this spring. Joel Peralta is an extreme flyballer with some iffy splits, but he may figure in from the right side. Kyle Farnsworth is a head-case with surprisingly solid numbers - who knows what he'll do. Jake McGee, however, is the upside pick in the bunch. He is a lefty, meaning he'll probably get at least the lefty-heavy saves, and he's also a fireballer with immense strikeout ability. If he shows he can handle the mental aspect of the role, he'll probably win out in the end.

Brad Lidge and David Aardsma are different stories. Lidge is scheduled for an MRI on his shoulder that will determine the length of his stay in club DL, and Aardsma is in the middle of a long rehab process. He may be back in the second month of the season.

The Deposed:

None… yet.

* * * * * * * * * *

The Steals Department

Mixed leaguers might find Dexter Fowler on their wires, and they shouldn't. Last year, Fowler improved his work against righties - which was important because he used to be known as a lefty-killer. He also improved his overall strikeout rate by three percent and improved his power numbers. He still hasn't gotten the handle on efficient basestealing (he's been successful on 67.8% of his attempts), but he's obviously a fast dude with average power. Most importantly, Fowler is the sole owner of center field in Colorado. Given that full slate of at-bats, Fowler could easily hit double-digit home runs, steal close to thirty bases, and put up a middling batting average. Think Shane Victorino, but at a much lower cost.

In deeper leagues, there's a move that might take some courage waiting for you on your waiver wire. Notorious 'hothead' Nyjer Morgan has been traded to the Milwaukee Brewers, and is being summarily dropped because Carlos Gomez is supposedly the incumbent in charge. The thing is, Gomez is one of the worst hitters in baseball. He walks at a below-average rate, strikes out more than the average player, has little power, and despite wheels, can't get on base to save his life. If he didn't own a plus-plus glove, he wouldn't have a job in baseball. Morgan, on the other hand, doesn't deserve the hothead label for one day late last season, strikes out much less than Gomez, and has similar wheels. He's been an elite defender before, too. If he can show good glove with his new team, he'll steal that starting role.